She sat bemused, her eyes upon the sunlit gardens below, where a faint breeze was stirring the shrub tops.
“There is,” she said presently, “a secret drawer somewhere in his desk. If he has papers they will, no doubt, be there. Had you not best be making search for them?”
He smiled darkly. “I have seen to that already,” he replied.
“How?” excitedly. “You have got the papers?”
“No; but I have set an experienced hand to find them, and one, moreover, who has the right by virtue of his warrant — the messenger of the secretary of state.”
She sat up, rigid. “‘Sdeath! What is’t ye mean?”
“No need for alarm,” he reassured her. “This fellow Green is in my pay, as well as in the secretary’s, and it will profit him most to keep faith with me. He’s a self-seeking dog, content to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds, so that there be profit in it, and he’d sacrifice his ears to bring Mr. Caryll to the gallows. I have promised him that and a thousand pounds if we save the estates from confiscation.”
She looked at him, between wonder and fear. “Can ye trust him?” she asked breathlessly.
He laughed softly and confidently. “I can trust him to earn a thousand pounds,” he answered. “When he heard of the impeachment, he used such influence as he has to be entrusted with the arrest of his lordship; and having obtained his warrant, he came first to me to tell me of it. A thousand pounds is the price of him, body and soul. I bade him seek not only evidence of my lord’s having received that plaguey stock, but also papers relating to this Jacobite plot into which his lordship has been drawn by our friend Caryll. He is at his work at present. And I shall hear from him when it is accomplished.”
She nodded slowly, thoughtfully. “You have very well disposed, Charles,” she approved him. “If your father lives, it should not be a difficult matter—”
She checked suddenly and turned, while Rotherby, too, looked up and stepped quickly from the window-embrasure where he had stood.
The door of the bedroom had been suddenly pulled open, and Sir James came out, very pale and discomposed.
“Madam — your ladyship — my lord!” he gasped, his mouth working, his hands waving foolishly.
The countess rose to confront him, tall, severe and harsh. The viscount scowled a question. Sir James quailed before them, evidently in affliction.
“Madam — his lordship,” he said, and by his eloquent gesture of dejection announced what he had some difficulty in putting into words.
She stepped forward, and took him by the wrist. “Is he dying?” she inquired.
“Have courage, madam,” the doctor besought her.
The apparent irrelevancy of the request at such a moment, angered her. Her mood was dangerously testy. And had the doctor but known it, sympathy was a thing she had not borne well these many years.
“I asked you was he dying,” she reminded him, with a cold sternness that beat aside all his attempts at subterfuge.
“Your ladyship — he is dead,” he faltered, with lowered eyes.
“Dead?” she echoed dully, and her hand went to the region of her heart, her face turned livid under its rouge. “Dead?” she said again, and behind her, Rotherby echoed the dread word in a stupor almost equal to her own. Her lips moved to speak, but no words came. She staggered where she stood, and put her hand to her brow. Her son’s arms were quickly about her. He supported her to a chair, where she sank as if all her joints were loosened.
Sir James flew for restoratives; bathed her brow with a dampened handkerchief; held strong salts to her nostrils, and murmured words of foolish, banal consolation, whilst Rotherby, in a half-dreaming condition, stunned by the suddenness of the blow, stood beside her, mechanically lending his assistance and supporting her.
Gradually she mastered her agitation. It was odd that she should feel so much at losing what she valued so little. Leastways, it would have been odd, had it been that. It was not — it was something more. In the awful, august presence of death, stepped so suddenly into their midst, she felt herself appalled.
For nigh upon thirty years she had been bound by legal and churchly ties in a loveless union with Lord Ostermore — married for the handsome portion that had been hers, a portion which he had gamed away and squandered until, for their station, their circumstances were now absolutely straitened. They had led a harsh, discordant life, and the coming of a son, which should have bridged the loveless gulf between them, seemed but to have served to dig it wider. And the son had been just the harsh, unfeeling offspring that might be looked for from such a union. Thirty years of slavery had been her ladyship’s, and in those thirty years her nature had been soured and warped, and what inherent sweetness it may once have known had long since been smothered and destroyed. She had no cause to love that man who had never loved her, never loved aught of hers beyond her jointure. And yet, there was the habit of thirty years. For thirty years they had been yoke-fellows, however detestable the yoke. But yesterday he had been alive and strong, a stupid, querulous thing maybe, but a living. And now he was so much carrion that should be given to the earth. In some such channel ran her ladyship’s reflections during those few seconds in which she was recovering. For an instant she was softened. The long-since dried-up springs of tenderness seemed like to push anew under the shock of this event. She put out a hand to take her son’s.
“Charles!” she said, and surprised him by the tender note.
A moment thus; then she was herself again. “How did he die?” she asked the doctor; and the abruptness of the resumption of her usual manner startled Sir James more than aught in his experience of such scenes.
“It was most sudden, madam,” answered he. “I had the best grounds for hope. I was being persuaded we should save him. And then, quite suddenly, without an instant’s warning, he succumbed. He just heaved a sigh, and was gone. I could scarcely believe my senses, madam.”
He would have added more particulars of his feelings and emotions — for he was of those who believe that their own impressions of a phenomenon are that phenomenon’s most interesting manifestations — but her ladyship waved him peremptorily into silence.
He drew back, washing his hands in the air, an expression of polite concern upon his face. “Is there aught else I can do to be of service to your ladyship?” he inquired, solicitous.
“What else?” she asked, with a fuller return to her old self. “Ye’ve killed him. What more is there you can do?”
“Oh, madam — nay, madam! I am most deeply grieved that my — my—”
“His lordship will wait upon you to the door,” said she, designating her son.
The eminent physician effaced himself from her ladyship’s attention. It was his boast that he could take a hint when one was given him; and so he could, provided it were broad enough, as in the present instance.
He gathered up his hat and gold-headed cane — the unfailing insignia of his order — and was gone, swiftly and silently.
Rotherby closed the door after him, and returned slowly, head bowed, to the window where his mother was still seated. They looked at each other gravely for a long moment.
“This makes matters easier for you,” she said at length.
“Much easier. It does not matter now how far his complicity may be betrayed by his papers. I am glad, madam, to see you so far recovered from your weakness.”
She shivered, as much perhaps at his tone as at the recollections he evoked. “You are very indifferent, Charles,” said she.
He looked at her steadily, then slightly shrugged. “What need to wear a mask? Bah! Did he ever give me cause to feel for him?” he asked. “Mother, if one day I have a son of my own, I shall see to it that he loves me.”
“You will be hard put to it, with your nature, Charles,” she told him critically. Then she rose. “Will you go to him with me?” she asked.
He made as if to acquiesce, then halted. “No,” he said, and there was repugnance in his tone and face. �
��Not — not now.”
There came a knocking at the door, rapid, insistent. Grateful for the interruption, Rotherby went to open.
Mr. Green staggered forward with swollen eyes, his face inflamed with rage, and with something else that was not quite apparent to Rotherby.
“My lord!” he cried in a loud, angry voice.
Rotherby caught his wrist and checked him. “Sh! sir,” he said gravely. “Not here.” And he pushed him out again, her ladyship following them.
It was in the gallery — above the hall, in which the servants still stood idly about — that Mr. Green spattered out his wrathful tale of what had befallen in the library.
Rotherby shook him as if he had been a rat. “You cursed fool!” he cried. “You left him there — at the desk?”
“What help had I?” demanded Green with spirit. “My eyes were on fire. I couldn’t see, and the pain of them made me helpless.”
“Then why did ye not send word to me at once, you fool?”
“Because I was concerned only to stop my eyes from burning,” answered Mr. Green, in a towering rage at finding reproof where he had come in quest of sympathy. “I have come to you at the first moment, damn you!” he burst out, in full rebellion. “And you’ll use me civilly now that I am come, or — ecod! — it’ll be the worse for your lordship.”
Rotherby considered him through a faint mist that rage had set before his eyes. To be so spoken to — damned indeed! — by a dirty spy! Had he been alone with the man, there can be little doubt but that he would have jeopardized his very precarious future by kicking Mr. Green downstairs. But his mother saved him from that rashness. It may be that she saw something of his anger in his kindling eye, and thought it well to intervene.
She set a hand on his sleeve. “Charles!” she said to him in a voice that was dead cold with warning.
He responded to it, and chose discretion. He looked Green over, nevertheless. “I vow I’m very patient with you,” said he, and Green had the discretion on his side to hold his tongue. “Come, man, while we stand talking here that knave may be destroying precious evidence.”
And his lordship went quickly down the stairs, Mr. Green following hard upon his heels, and her ladyship bringing up the rear.
At the door of the library Rotherby came to a halt, and turned the handle. The door was locked. He beckoned a couple of footmen across the hall, and bade them break it open.
CHAPTER XX. Mr. CARYLL’S IDENTITY
“I must see Lord Ostermore!” had been Mr. Caryll’s wild cry, as he strode to the door.
From the other side of it there came a sound of steps and voices. Some one was turning the handle.
Hortensia caught Mr. Caryll by the sleeve. “But the letters!” she cried frantically, and pointed to the incriminating papers which he had left, forgotten, upon the desk.
He stared at her a moment, and memory swept upon him in a flood. He mastered the wild agitation that had been swaying him, thrust the paper that he was carrying into his pocket, and turned to go back for the treasonable letters.
“The taper!” he exclaimed, and pointed to the extinguished candle on the floor. “What can we do?”
A sharp blow fell upon the lock of the door. He stood still, looking over his shoulder.
“Quick! Make haste!” Hortensia admonished him in her excitement. “Get them! Conceal them, at least! Do the best you can since we have not the means to burn them.”
A second blow was struck, succeeded instantly by a third, and something was heard to snap. The door swung open, and Green and Rotherby sprang into the room, a brace of footmen at their heels. They were followed more leisurely by the countess; whilst a little flock of servants brought up the rear, but checked upon the threshold, and hung there to witness events that held out such promise of being unusual.
Mr. Caryll swore through set teeth, and made a dash for the desk. But he was too late to accomplish his object. His hand had scarcely closed upon the letters, when he was, himself, seized. Rotherby and Green, on either side of him, held him in their grasp, each with one hand upon his shoulder and the other at his wrist. Thus stood he, powerless between them, and, after the first shock of it, cool and making no effort to disengage himself. His right hand was tightly clenched upon the letters.
Rotherby called a servant forward. “Take those papers from the thief’s hand,” he commanded.
“Stop!” cried Mr. Caryll. “Lord Rotherby, may I speak with you alone before you go further in a matter you will bitterly regret?”
“Take those papers from him,” Rotherby repeated, swearing; and the servant bent to the task. But Mr. Caryll suddenly wrenched the hand away from the fellow and the wrist out of Lord Rotherby’s grip.
“A moment, my lord, as you value your honor and your possessions!” he insisted. “Let me speak with Lord Ostermore first. Take me before him.”
“You are before him now,” said Rotherby. “Say on!”
“I demand to see Lord Ostermore.”
“I am Lord Ostermore,” said Rotherby.
“You? Since when?” said Mr. Caryll, not even beginning to understand.
“Since ten minutes ago,” was the callous answer that first gave that household the news of my lord’s passing.
There was a movement, a muttering among the servants. Old Humphries broke through the group by the door, his heavy chops white and trembling, and in that moment Hortensia turned, awe-stricken, to ask her ladyship was this true. Her ladyship nodded in silence. Hortensia cried out, and sank to a chair as if beaten down by the news, whilst the old servant, answered, too, withdrew, wringing his hands and making foolish laments; and the tears of those were the only tears that watered the grave of John Caryll, fifth Earl of Ostermore.
As for Mr. Caryll, the shock of that announcement seemed to cast a spell upon him. He stood still, limp and almost numbed. Oh, the never-ceasing irony of things! That his father should have died at such a moment.
“Dead?” quoth he. “Dead? Is my lord dead? They told me he was recovering.”
“They told you false,” answered Rotherby. “So now — those papers!”
Mr. Caryll relinquished them. “Take them,” he said. “Since that is so — take them.”
Rotherby received them himself. “Remove his sword,” he bade a footman.
Mr. Caryll looked sharply round at him. “My sword?” quoth he. “What do you mean by that? What right?”
“We mean to keep you by us, sir,” said Mr. Green on his other side, “until you have explained what you were doing with those papers — what is your interest in them.”
Meanwhile a servant had done his lordship’s bidding, and Mr. Caryll stood weaponless amid his enemies. He mastered himself at once. Here it was plain that he must walk with caution, for the ground, he perceived, was of a sudden grown most insecure and treacherous. Rotherby and Green in league! It gave him matter for much thought.
“There’s not the need to hold me,” said he quietly. “I am not likely to tire myself by violence. There’s scarcely necessity for so much.”
Rotherby looked up sharply. The cool, self-possessed tone had an intimidating note. But Mr. Green laughed maliciously, as he continued to mop his still watering eyes. He was acquainted with Mr. Caryll’s methods, and knew that, probably, the more at ease he seemed, the less at ease he was.
Rotherby spread the letters on the desk, and scanned them with a glowing eye, Mr. Green at his elbow reading with him. The countess swept forward that she, too, might inspect this find.
“They’ll serve their turn,” said her son, and added to Caryll: “And they’ll help to hang you.”
“No doubt you find me mentioned in them,” said Mr. Caryll.
“Ay, sir,” snapped Green, “if not by name, at least as the messenger who is to explain that which the writers — the royal writer and the other — have out of prudence seen fit to exclude.”
Hortensia looked up and across the room at that, a wild fear clutching at her heart. But Mr. Caryll laughed
pleasantly, eyebrows raised as if in mild surprise. “The most excellent relations appear to prevail between you,” said he, looking from Rotherby to Green. “Are you, too, my lord, in the secretary’s pay.”
His lordship flushed darkly. “You’ll clown it to the end,” he sneered.
“And that’s none so far off,” snarled Mr. Green, who since the peppering of his eyes, had flung aside his usual cherubic air. “Oh, you may sneer, sir,” he mocked the prisoner. “But we have you fast. This letter was brought hither by you, and this one was to have been carried hence by you.”
“The latter, sir, was a matter for the future, and you can hardly prove what a man will do; so we’ll let that pass. As for the former — the letter which you say I brought — you’ll remember that you searched me at Maidstone—”
“And I have your admission that the letter was upon you at the time,” roared the spy, interrupting him— “your admission in the presence of that lady, as she can be made to witness.”
Mistress Winthrop rose. “’Tis a lie,” she said firmly. “I can not be made to witness.”
Mr. Caryll smiled, and nodded across to her. “’Tis vastly kind in you, Mistress Winthrop. But the gentleman is mistook.” He turned to Green. “Harkee, sirrah did I admit that I had carried that letter?”
Mr. Green shrugged. “You admitted that you carried a letter. What other letter should it have been but that?”
“Nay,” smiled Mr. Caryll. “’Tis not for you to ask me. Rather is it for you to prove that the letter I admitted having carried and that letter are one and the same. ‘Twill take a deal of proving, I dare swear.”
“Ye’ll be forsworn, then,” put in her ladyship sourly. “For I can witness to the letter that you bore. Not only did I see it — a letter on that same fine paper — in my husband’s hands on the day you came here and during your visit, but I have his lordship’s own word for it that he was in the plot and that you were the go-between.”
Collected Works of Rafael Sabatini Page 209